"
This Used to Be My Playground" is a song recorded by American singer
Madonna. It is the theme for the film
A League of Their Own, which starred Madonna, and portrayed a fictionalized account of the real-life
All-American Girls Professional Baseball League. Madonna was asked to record a song for the film's soundtrack. At that time she was busy recording her fifth studio album,
Erotica, with producer
Shep Pettibone. They worked on some ideas and came up with "This Used to Be My Playground" in two days. Once presented to director
Penny Marshall's team, the song was released as a standalone single on June 16, 1992, by
Warner Bros. Records. However, it was not available on the film's soundtrack due to contractual obligations and was later added to the
Olympics-inspired
Barcelona Gold compilation album, released that summer. The song was included on Madonna's 1995 ballads compilation
Something to Remember.
Written and produced by Madonna and Pettibone, "This Used to Be My Playground" was the first time that Pettibone worked with live string
arrangement. Madonna recorded the song on a
Shure SM57 microphone, with instrumentation from piano, organ, strings and a basic drum sounds. During the final recording, the duo had to redo the whole orchestra section to tailor it for the song. "This Used to Be My Playground" starts with a keyboard introduction and strings, with Madonna singing in expressive but subdued vocals. Its
verse and
chorus merge into each other for having a continuity in the song, but the track ends abruptly. Lyrically it discusses visiting one's childhood places and not letting go of the past.
The song received positive reviews from critics, who noted it as an essential addition in Madonna's repertoire. The song earned the singer a
Golden Globe Award nomination for
Best Original Song. It was a commercial success, reaching the top of the charts on the US
Billboard Hot 100; the track was Madonna's tenth chart-topping single, breaking her tie with
Whitney Houston to become the female artist with the most number one singles at that time. It also reached the top of the charts in Canada, Finland, Italy and Sweden, while reaching the top-ten of the charts in Australia, Belgium, France, Germany, Ireland, Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. Even though the song was commercially successful, Madonna has never performed it in any of her
concert tours, nor included it on her greatest hits albums,
GHV2 (2001) and
Celebration (2009).
Background and release[edit]
In 1992, Madonna starred in the
Penny Marshall directed film
A League of Their Own, which portrayed a fictionalized account of the real-life
All-American Girls Professional Baseball League (AAGPBL).
[1] Columbia Records representatives presented music supervisor Jay Landers with the film's script. Together with Michael Dilbeck, head of music for
Columbia Pictures, they decided to compose a soundtrack for the film. According to Landers, Marshall being well connected to the music community also helped them choose the artists they wanted to work with. The director wanted the music and songs to be performed by contemporary artists, but catering to the period of 1943–44, which was the film's timeline.
Carole King had already written the opening song for
A League of Their Own, and Madonna being associated with it, Columbia wanted her to record another song. Lars recalled that there was some "early hesitation" if Madonna's character should be kept the same or separated from that in the film and the song, and in the end they decided to go with the latter concept.
[2]
After the shooting was over, Madonna was busy in the recording sessions for her fifth studio album,
Erotica with producer
Shep Pettibone. Throughout January–March 1992, Madonna and Pettibone worked on
demos for the album and finally decided on 15 of them.
[3] When Lars called Madonna and asked her to record a song for the film, the singer and Pettibone had just completed working on the ballad "
Rain". Madonna admitted that she did not have any material for the film and Lars explained that Marshall wanted only a ballad. Pettibone composed a track the same night and Madonna had some ideas she wanted to incorporate.
[2] During an interview with
The Guardian, Madonna described the process as "assignment writing" since it was completely separate from her
Erotica sessions.
[4] It took them two days to write and produce the song, and the final version was submitted to Marshall's team. Lars recalled that they "immediately loved it... We all thought it would be a very successful record and we knew right away it would be perfect."
[2]
Due to contractual reasons, the track could not be included on the official
A League of Their Own soundtrack; instead, it was included on the compilation
Barcelona Gold, which was released to promote the
1992 Barcelona Summer Olympics.
[5][6] "This Used to Be My Playground" was officially released as a standalone
single to promote the film, on June 16, 1992, by
Warner Bros. Records.
[7] The song was later included on the 1995 ballad compilation album
Something to Remember.
[8]
Recording and composition[edit]
Recording the track was a new experience for Pettibone since it was the first time that he worked with live musicians and arrangements. Pettibone took the demo of the song, and added live
drums,
piano and
strings to it. They did not have any strings written originally for the song, and chose composer Jeremy Lubbock for the music
arrangement; Lubbock had previously worked with Madonna on her soundtrack album
I'm Breathless (1990).
[2] Madonna recorded the song on a
Shure SM57 microphone, with the melody being played over and over again, accompanied by the piano,
organ, strings and a basic rim-looping sound on a portable
Macintosh computer. Pettibone spent the rest of the recording session working on the
verses and final structure of "This Used to Be My Playground" was completed. The day after the song was finished, Madonna traveled to
Oregon to work on her next film,
Body of Evidence, giving Pettibone the time to finish off the songs for
Erotica.
[3]
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A 30-second sample of "This Used to Be My Playground" which displays the subdued but expressive vocals by Madonna, as well as an accompaniment of strings.
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Problems playing this file? See media help. |
The duo met again in May 1992 at Oceanway Studios in Los Angeles to complete the orchestration of the song. Lubbock's arrangement was chosen for adding the final touches and the recording started. However, Madonna and Pettibone did not like the orchestra parts and wanted to redo the whole composition. The producer recalled, "Madonna and I had to change the whole arrangement, right there in the studio, with a full orchestra sitting there getting paid for taking up space—around $15,000 for three hours, $3000 for every half-hour over that. And of course, Lubbock was talking to two people who didn't know a
C from a
B natural. The pressure was on".
[3] So they stood near Pettibone's Mac and sang the notes, with Lubbock correcting them. The total recording was finished off in 2 hours and 58 minutes, thereby saving to pay the orchestra the extra fees. The last recording of the song was on
Memorial Day where Madonna re-did the lead vocals and improved them. Together they did some final edits of the track and finished it.
[3]
"This Used to Be My Playground" features a
keyboard introduction, followed by the strings and the song starts.
[9] Musically, the song is set in the time signature of
common time with a slow
tempo of 77
beats per minute. It is composed in the
key of
G minor with Madonna vocals ranging from the chords of G
3 to B
♭4. The song follows a basic sequence of Gm–F/G–E
♭maj
7–Dm
7–Gsus–G as its
chord progression.
[10]The chords have an unexpected flow in terms of the beginning and the ending, moving from E
♭ down to Gm and momentarily to
F major, then going back to the previous sequence again. The song has a lush,
romantic quality, with the melody going through different ranges and peaks, and the verse and the chorus flow into each other, making it sound seamless. Madonna sings in subdued but expressive vocals, aided by the strings and background singers during the third verse. Towards the end the singer's voice is
double tracked and produces little amount of roughness.
[9] Lyrically the song talks about Madonna revisiting the places from her childhood ("This used to be my playground / This used to be my childhood dream"), and evokes the songwriting on her fourth studio album,
Like a Prayer (1989). The singer is in a dilemma between choosing the past and letting go, concluding that the latter is difficult ("Say goodbye to yesterday (the dream) / Those are words I'll never say (I'll never say))". The track has a sudden ending with the orchestra and the backing vocal uttering "Wishing you were here with me", the line addressed to Madonna's mother.
[9]
Critical response[edit]
After its release, "This Used to Be My Playground" received positive reviews from
music critics.
J. Randy Taraborrelli, author of
Madonna: An Intimate Biography, called the track a "melancholic performance".
[11] Michelle Morgan, author of the book
Madonna, described it as a "beautiful ballad".
[12] Similarly, Humberto Quiroga Lavié called it one of Madonna's best ballads in his essay
Secretos y Misterios de Hombres y Mujeres.
[13] Author Rikky Rooksby wrote in his book
The Complete Guide to the Music of Madonna, that the song was appropriate for the film and its nostalgic moment towards the end, showing the characters grown up and reuniting at a museum opened for themselves and the titular league. He called it "one of Madonna's very best recordings and most expressive single".
[9] While reviewing
Something to Remember, author
Chris Wade wrote in his book
The Music of Madonna, that the song conjured up a "strangely sad, nostalgic feel, reminding ourselves of memories from yesteryear". He commended Madonna's vocals calling it as the song's "premier sound" and adding that the way "she sings and captures the melancholic melody is heartbreaking [...] it's one of her finest ever ballads."
[14]Encyclopedia Madonnica writer and journalist
Matthew Rettenmund noted in the book that the song's rise to the top of the charts was aided by its "honest delivery and aching sense of loneliness, regret and nostalgia for friendship lost."
[15]
Matthew Jacobs from
The Huffington Post, placed it at number 32 on his list "The Definitive Ranking Of Madonna Singles". He wrote: "What's surprising is that this heartfelt ballad's release was sandwiched between '
Justify My Love' and '
Erotica', which corroborates the many checkered crowns that Madonna can wear".
[16] Similarly,
AllMusic's Jose F. Promis called it "a quiet predecessor to her most notorious album
Erotica". Promis also believed that the single version of the song was worth of collecting since it was not released in CD version in the United States.
[17] Sal Cinquemani from
Slant Magazine, called it one of the singer's "soundtrack gems".
[18] Writing for the
Deseret News, Chris Hicks called the song "a lovely change-of-pace number" for Madonna.
[19]
Louis Virtel, from
TheBacklot.com, placed "This Used to Be My Playground" at number 52 of his list "The 100 Greatest Madonna Songs". He wrote; "The theme to Madonna’s best movie is nostalgic and sweet, and it gave her a major hit that utilized the lachrymose qualities in her voice."
[20] Mary Ann A. Bautist, from the
Philippine Daily Inquirer, called it one of the singer's "alternative tunes [...] that can be as romantic and touching as any ballad".
[21] Liz Smith, from
The Toledo Blade, called it an "exquisite ballad".
[22] On his review of the compilation
Barcelona Gold,
The Daily Gazette's Bill Rice wrote: "Madonna's plaintive single 'This Used to Be My Playground', is one medal winner".
[23] A negative review came from
Stylus Magazine's Alfred Soto, who dismissed the song as a "slushy rewrite of
Like a Prayer's 'Promise to Try'".
[24] The song was nominated for a
Golden Globe award for
Best Original Song, but lost to "
A Whole New World" from
Aladdin.
[25][26] It won two accolades at the
ASCAP Awards, in the categories of Most Performed Songs from Motion Pictures and Most Performed Pop Song.
[27][28]
Chart performance[edit]
With "This Used to Be My Playground", Madonna broke her tie with
Whitney Houston as the female artist with the most number one singles on the US
Billboard Hot 100.
In the United States, "This Used to Be My Playground" debuted on the
Billboard Hot 100 chart at number 35, for the week of July 4, 1992.
[29] The debut was aided by just
airplay points which enabled it to enter the
Hot 100 Airplay chart at number 14. The song received immediate heavy rotation in US radio stations like
Hot 97 in New York and
Wild 107 in San Francisco.
[30] One week later, the song jumped to number 17 on the Hot 100, having had the largest sales and airplay points of any record on the chart.
[31] On August 8, 1992, the song reached the top of the chart for one week, becoming Madonna's tenth number one single, breaking her tie with
Whitney Houston as the female artist with the most number one singles at that time.
[32][33] The song replaced "
Baby Got Back" by
Sir Mix-a-Lot although it was number three on the
Hot Singles Sales and Hot 100 Airplay charts. According to Michael Ellis from
Billboard, the song edged out "Baby Got Back" by a small margin of chart points.
[33]The song spent a total of 20 weeks on the chart and ranked at number 21 on the Hot 100 year end chart for 1992.
[32][34]
"This Used to Be My Playground" also reached peak positions of number two on the
Hot 100 Airplay and number four on the
Adult Contemporary charts.
[35] On September 10, 1992, it was certified gold by the
Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for shipments of 500,000 copies.
[36] Billboard ranked it at number 22 on their list of "Madonna's 40 Biggest Hits" on the Hot 100.
[37] In Canada, the song debuted at number 60 on the
RPM Top Singles chart on July 4, 1992.
[38] After seven weeks it reached the top of the chart and was present for a total of 19 weeks.
[39][40]It also reached number two on the
RPM Adult Contemporary chart.
[41]
In the United Kingdom, the song debuted at number five on the
UK Singles Chart, and reached a peak of number three the week of August 25, 1992, and was present on the top 100 for a total of 9 weeks.
[42] It was certified silver by the
British Phonographic Industry (BPI) on September 1, 1992, for shipments of 200,000 copies.
[43] The single has sold over 275,000 copies as of October 2010.
[44] The song also achieved great success across Europe, hitting number one in various countries including Italy, Finland, and Sweden and charting within the top ten in other countries.
[45][46][47] It resulted in the song achieving a peak of number two on the
European Hot 100 Singles chart.
[48] In Australia the song reached a peak of number nine on the
ARIA Charts and received a gold certification from the
Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) for shipment of 35,000 copies.
[49][50]
Music video[edit]
The accompanying
music video, directed by
Alek Keshishian, was filmed in June 1992 at
Raleigh Studios in
Hollywood, California and
Malibu Beach. It premiered on
MTV on June 30, 1992, a day before the release of
A League of Their Own.
[15] The video shows a man viewing a photo album, as Madonna sings in different settings from within the various pictures. Scenes from
A League of Their Own also appear on the album during the song's instrumental break. As the video ends, the man having reached the end of the album, then scrolls backwards through the previous pages. The video was commercially released in 2004 as a bonus feature on the 2-disc special edition DVD of
A League of Their Own.
[51] According to Rettenmund, unlike most music videos related to film soundtracks, "This Used to Be My Playground" did not give emphasis on having shots from the film in the video itself. Instead Keshishian and Madonna chose introspection as the theme, with simple images to portray them. Rettenmund notes, "At the end, the man who has been looking back at his scrapbook of Madonna lays his head down, sealing the video with the perfect bit of sadness to resonate with Madonna's ennui."
[15]
The video has been compared to
Boy George's video for his 1987 single, "To Be Reborn", released less than five years before "This Used to Be My Playground". In George's video, he also appears on pages of a photo album, performing the song. George himself stated in his autobiography that he was "furious" after watching Madonna's video and renamed it "This Used to Be My Video".
[52][53]
Track listing[edit]
-
- 7" vinyl, Cassette single, Japanese 3" CD single[7]
- "This Used to Be My Playground" (single version) – 5:08
- "This Used to Be My Playground" (long version) – 6:03
-
- European 12" vinyl, CD single[54]
- "This Used to Be My Playground" (single version) – 5:08
- "This Used to Be My Playground" (instrumental version) – 6:54
- "This Used to Be My Playground" (long version) – 6:03
Credits and personnel[edit]
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